Wednesday, March 19, 2014

So is the gravitational constant everywhere the same?

If you believe the correct order, from smooth to steep, it Nyquist then Gravity then the small heavy stuff, then you always get a gravity constant relative to the Nyquist. But the universe is still making things countable, and there are orders higher than gravity, sorry folks.  Physicists using the general relativity with a gravitational constant have to estimate those higher orders, and bundle them into the Nyquist, thus making gravity the order beneath Nyquist.

But Nyquist is not so sure, the universe still has a lot of redundancy, and the Nyquist does not know how much.  In fact, we have a much better idea of the remaining redundancy in the universe, its in the star groups, the galaxies, the sparsity of quasars, the existence of magtnetron stars and pulsars.

If we take a compact galaxy and compare it to a very sparse galaxy, the gravitational constant about each star will differ a bit. I am sorry, Nyquist is not God.

No comments: